Review: Monument (Red Stitch Actors’ Theatre)
Notions of authenticity explored and contemporary politics expertly skewered in this ambitious, flawlessly performed two-hander.
Notions of authenticity explored and contemporary politics expertly skewered in this ambitious, flawlessly performed two-hander.
Winter in Canberra seems more memory than dream these days but this was an imaginative and satisfying experience.
Musica Viva Tasmania assembles a formidable team for a stylistically varied program of piano quartets.
An enjoyable, eclectic evening of awe-inspiring musicianship with an unlikely instrumental trio.
The Sydney-based saxophone quartet brings to life its album Tango de Saxos in a performance that transports us to the dance halls of Buenos Aires.
Talent, enthusiasm and diversity make this humble production of a classic musical well worth a look.
A short, sharply written double bill showcases great British playwright Caryl Churchill.
In her new solo show, Bernadette Robinson inhabits 10 divas, from Maria Callas to Amy Winehouse.
WASO delivers one of its most original and entertaining concert programs to date - and farewells a 30-year veteran.
This mad little musical whodunit is delicious, bonkers and extremely funny.
There is much to recognise and cherish in this adaptation of Charlotte Wood's touching novel of old friends reuniting.
With its warm and reverberant acoustics, Elder Hall proves an entirely sympathetic venue for this airing of disparate works.
Opera Queensland's Cosi is a lot funnier, fancier and fizzier than its advertising poster suggests.